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Advanced Accounting Chapter 2 Consolidation
1. Advanced Accounting
Chapter 2: Consolidation of Financial
Information
Lecturer: Abdulkadir Molla
Contacts:
Phone: 5534340
Email: amnsomali@gmail.com
2. Introduction
• When financial statements represent one more
corporation, refer to them as consolidated
financial statements.
• In this chapter, we first present expansions
through corporate takeovers and present an of
the overview of the consolidation process.
• Then we present the specifics of the acquisition
methods of accounting for business combinations
where the acquirer obtains complete ownership
of an other firm.
3. Reasons Firms Combine
• Vertical integration
• Cost savings
• Quick entry into new markets
• Economies of scale
• More attractive financing opportunities
• Diversification of business risk
• Business Expansion
• Increasingly competitive environment
4. Business Combinations
Separate organizations tied together through
common control under common management are
combined into a single entity.
FASB Accounting Standards Codification (ASC)
Business Combinations (Topic 805) and
Consolidation (Topic 810) provide guidance using the
“acquisition method”.
The acquisition method embraces a fair value
measurement attribute that reflects the FASB’s
increasing emphasis on fair value for measuring and
assessing business activity.
5. The Consolidation Process
• “There is a presumption that consolidated
statements are more meaningful.. and that they
are usually necessary for a fair presentation
when one of the companies in the group… has a
controlling financial interest..” FASB ASC (810-
10-10-1)
Consolidated financial statements provide more
meaningful information than separate statements.
Consolidated financial statements more fairly present the
activities of the consolidated companies.
Consolidated companies may retain their legal identities as
separate corporations.
6. Consolidation of Financial Information
Subsidiaries’
financial data
Prepare a single set of consolidated financial statements.
Parent’s
financial data
2-6
To report the financial position, results of operations, and cash flows for
the combined entity.
Reciprocal accounts and intra-entity transactions are adjusted or
eliminated to. . .
brought together
7. Business Combinations
• Business combinations . . .
can be achieved through transactions or
events in which an acquirer obtains control over
one or more businesses.
Create single economic entities.
Can be formed by a variety of events but can
differ widely in legal form.
Require consolidated financial statements.
8. Business Combinations—Creating a
Single Economic Entity
1. One company obtains the assets, and often the
liabilities, of another company in exchange for
cash, other assets, liabilities, stock, or a
combination of these. The second organization
normally dissolves itself as a legal corporation.
• Thus, only the acquiring company remains in
existence, having absorbed the acquired net
assets directly into its own operations. Any
business combination in which only one of the
original companies continues to exist is referred
to in legal terms as a statutory merger.
9. Cont….
• 2. One company obtains all of the capital stock of
another in exchange for cash, other assets,
liabilities, stock, or a combination of these. After
gaining control, the acquiring company can
decide to transfer all assets and liabilities to its
own financial records with the second company
being dissolved as a separate corporation.
• The business combination is, once again, a
statutory merger because only one of the
companies maintains legal existence
10. Cont…
3. Two or more companies transfer
either their assets or their capital
stock to a newly formed corporation.
• Both original companies are
dissolved, leaving only the new
organization in existence. A business
combination effected in this manner
is a statutory consolidation.
11. 4. One company achieves legal control over another by
acquiring a majority of voting stock. Although control
is present, no dissolution takes place; each company
remains in existence as an incorporated operation.
• Because the asset and liability account balances are
not physically combined as in statutory mergers and
consolidations, each company continues to maintain an
independent accounting system. To reflect the
combination, the acquiring company enters the
takeover transaction into its own records by
establishing a single investment asset account.
12. Cont…
• A final vehicle for control of another
business entity does not involve a
majority voting stock interest or direct
ownership of assets.
• Control of a variable interest entity (VIE)
by design often does not rest with its
equity holders. Instead, control is
exercised through contractual
arrangements
13. The Acquisition Method
• Applying the acquisition method typically
involves recognizing and measuring:
• the consideration transferred for the
acquired business and any non-controlling
interest.
• the separately identified assets acquired
and liabilities assumed.
• goodwill, or a gain from a bargain purchase.
14. FASB ASC:
• The consideration transferred in a business
combination shall be measured at fair value,
which shall be calculated as the sum of the
acquisition-date fair values of the assets
transferred by the acquirer, the liabilities
incurred by the acquirer to former owners of
the acquiree, and the equity interests issued
by the acquirer. (FASB ASC para. 805-30-30-7)
15. Assets Acquired and Liabilities Assumed
• A fundamental principle of the acquisition method is
that an acquirer must identify the assets acquired and
the liabilities assumed in the business combination.
• Fair value, as defined by GAAP, is the price that would
be received from selling an asset or paid for
transferring a liability in an orderly transaction
between market participants at the measurement
date. However, determining the acquisition-date fair
values of the individual assets acquired and liabilities
assumed can prove challenging. To estimate fair values,
three sets of valuation techniques are typically
employed: the market approach, the income approach,
and the cost approach.
16. Cont…
• Market Approach recognizes that fair values
can be estimated using other market
transactions involving similar assets or
liabilities.
• Income Approach relies on multiperiod
estimates of future cash flows projected to be
generated by an asset.
• Cost Approach estimates fair values by
reference to the current cost of replacing an
asset with another of comparable economic
utility.
17. Procedures for Consolidating
Financial Information
1. Acquisition method when dissolution
takes place.
2. Acquisition method when separate
incorporation is maintained.
22. Related Costs of Business Combinations
• Three additional categories of costs typically
accompany business combinations, regardless of
whether dissolution takes place.
• First, firms often engage attorneys, accountants,
investment bankers, and other professionals for
combination-related services.
• The acquisition method does not consider such
expenditures as part of the fair value received by
the acquirer. Therefore, professional service fees
are expensed in the period incurred.
23. Cont…
• The second category concerns an acquiring
firm’s internal costs. Examples include
secretarial and management time allocated to
the acquisition activity. Such indirect costs are
reported as current year expenses, too.
• Finally, amounts incurred to register and issue
securities in connection with a business
combination simply reduce the otherwise
determinable fair value of the securities.
25. The Acquisition Method When Separate Incorporation
Is Maintained
• When dissolution does not occur, the
acquiring company does not physically record
the acquired assets and liabilities.
• Because dissolution does not occur, each
company maintains independent record-
keeping.
• To facilitate the preparation of consolidated
financial statements, a worksheet and
consolidation entries are employed using data
gathered from these separate companies.
29. Preexisting Goodwill on Subsidiary’s
Books
• However, in many cases, an acquired firm has an
unidentifiable asset (i.e., goodwill recorded on its
books in connection with a previous business
combination of its own).
• A question arises as to the parent’s treatment of
this preexisting goodwill on the newly acquired
subsidiary’s books.
• By its very nature, such preexisting goodwill is not
considered identifiable by the parent. Therefore,
the new owner simply ignores it in allocating the
acquisition-datefair value.